India demands over $30 billion from Reliance Industries and BP in arbitration for failing to produce expected gas from the KG-D6 offshore field, sources reveal. This escalates a long-running dispute amid claims of underproduction, potentially impacting energy majors' finances.
The claim targets Reliance (operator with 60% stake), BP (30%), and Niko in the Krishna-Godavari (KG-D6) block under NELP contracts. India alleges the consortium underproduced gas, breaching production sharing terms despite prior approvals from government committees. Arbitration filings cite shortfalls due to geological issues, with hearings nearing finality.
Key Highlights
Massive Penalty: Over $30 billion sought for unmet output targets from the deepwater field, dwarfing earlier $247M cost disputes set for 2026 verdict.
Contract Breach Claim: Government argues no PSC provision allows post-incurrence cost disallowance; Reliance defends full recovery rights pre-profit share.
Historical Context: Builds on decade old gas migration rows with ONGC ($2.81B prior demand); KG-D6 remains India's top deepwater producer despite shortfalls.
Equity Stakes: Reliance leads operations; BP and Niko face joint liability in international arbitration.
Market Implications
Resolution could strain Reliance's balance sheet amid energy transition pushes, while BP navigates global portfolios. Investors eye 2026 outcomes for stock volatility.
Sources: Marketscreener, Republic World, Economic Times.